A fed­er­al appeals court in Ohio has over­turned the death sen­tence imposed on an African American defen­dant whose defense lawyer pre­sent­ed tes­ti­mo­ny from a clin­i­cal psy­chol­o­gist that one quar­ter of urban Black men were sociopaths who should be locked up or thrown away. 

In a unan­i­mous rul­ing on August 22, 2022, a three-judge pan­el of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held that the racial­ized tes­ti­mo­ny” offered by a defense expert at the tri­al of Malik Allah-U-Akbar (pic­tured) offends the Constitution on its face” and that Akbar’s defense coun­sel was inef­fec­tive in pre­sent­ing it to the jury. The court, which referred to Akbar by his pri­or name, Odraye Jones, ordered that Akbar be grant­ed a new sen­tenc­ing tri­al. (Akbar legal­ly changed his name while his fed­er­al habeas cor­pus pro­ceed­ings were pending.)

Akbar was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for the November 1997 mur­der of an Ashtabula police offi­cer who was attempt­ing to serve an arrest war­rant. He was rep­re­sent­ed by a court-appoint­ed lawyer, David Doughten, whom Akbar unsuc­cess­ful­ly tried to replace just before the start of tri­al with anoth­er lawyer retained by his fam­i­ly. Doughten hired clin­i­cal psy­chol­o­gist Dr. James Eisenberg as a defense men­tal health expert, who, while the tri­al was already under­way, sub­mit­ted an expert report to the defense in which he diag­nosed Akbar with Antisocial Personality Disorder.

Doughten nev­er­the­less pre­sent­ed Eisenberg as an expert wit­ness when Akbar’s tri­al advanced to the penal­ty phase. Eisenberg then offered the jury what the court described as a racial­ized” descrip­tion of ADP, false­ly stat­ing that while the dis­or­der afflict­ed one to three per­cent of the gen­er­al pop­u­la­tion,” it was present in 15 to 25 per­cent, maybe even 30 per­cent” of urban African American males.” 

[T]he best treat­ment for the anti­so­cial, if the vio­la­tions are severe, is to throw them away, lock them up,” Eisenberg said. He then cred­it­ed the high incar­cer­a­tion rates for Black men with reduc­ing the num­ber of homi­cides, say­ing it would elim­i­nate those indi­vid­u­als from engag­ing in this con­duct. So part of it is incar­cer­a­tion itself that precludes homicide.”

The appeals court reversed Akbar’s death sen­tence, cit­ing the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2017 deci­sion in Buck v. Davis, which vacat­ed Texas death-row pris­on­er Duane Buck’s death sen­tence after his own lawyer pre­sent­ed men­tal health tes­ti­mo­ny that Buck would be more like­ly to present a future dan­ger because he was Black. Writing for the unan­i­mous pan­el, Judge Richard Allen Griffin said, Much like the expert in Buck, Eisenberg’s opin­ion coin­cid­ed pre­cise­ly with a par­tic­u­lar­ly nox­ious strain of racial prej­u­dice’ — that of Black men as vio­lence prone’ — which offends the Constitution on its face and can­not be considered strategic.”

Eisenberg reached his diag­no­sis of Antisocial Personality Disorder — com­mon­ly referred to as sociopa­thy” — based pri­mar­i­ly on his review of Akbar’s and Akbar’s mother’s court and crim­i­nal records. He told the jury that to be anti­so­cial means that you vio­late the rights of oth­ers; that you take advan­tage of oth­ers; you steal from oth­ers. That you don’t have a sense of empa­thy for what it means to cause harm[.]” 

Defense coun­sel then repeat­ed Eisenberg’s tes­ti­mo­ny dur­ing his clos­ing argu­ment to the jury. I think it’s a quar­ter of the urban males, I don’t know the sta­tis­tics, come up with, urban [B]lack American youth, come up with [APD]. Is that sur­pris­ing? A num­ber of peo­ple in prison with this. Is that sur­pris­ing? And Dr. [Ei]senberg said it’s real­ly untreat­able. This isn’t a sit­u­a­tion you can treat. This is some­thing that we can’t say give him some treat­ment. It’s untreat­able; you have to put him out of soci­ety until it runs its course.”

In Buck, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, when a jury hears expert tes­ti­mo­ny that express­ly makes a defendant’s race direct­ly per­ti­nent on the ques­tion of life or death, the impact of that evi­dence can­not be mea­sured sim­ply by how much air time it received at tri­al or how many pages it occu­pies in the record. Some tox­ins can be dead­ly in small doses.” 

Assessing the prej­u­dice to Akbar, Judge Griffin wrote, because, as part of the sen­tenc­ing process, the jury passed judg­ment on whether this racist evi­dence itself was a mit­i­gat­ing fac­tor, there is a rea­son­able prob­a­bil­i­ty that Jones would have received a less­er sen­tence if Dr. Eisenberg’s tes­ti­mo­ny was not introduced.”

On September 1, 2022, the Ohio Attorney General’s office filed a peti­tion seek­ing recon­sid­er­a­tion of the panel’s deci­sion by the entire appeals court.

Citation Guide
Sources

Bernie Pazanowski, Expert’s Racist Remarks Get Black Death-Row Inmate New Sentence, Bloomberg Law, August 23, 2022; Nicole Duncan-Smith, Throw Them Away’: Federal Court Overturns Ohio Man’s Death Sentence, Ruling Prosecutors’ Expert Witness Influenced the Jury with Racist Remarks About Black Men with His Condition’, Atlanta Black-Star, August 252022.

Read the August 22, 2022 deci­sion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Jones v. Bradshaw.